Thomas Murray provides a comprehensive view of post-trade risk in capital market infrastructures that can be used by asset owners, fund managers and hedge funds to maximise asset safety and monitor their counterparties to meet IOSCO and other regulatory requirements.

CAPITAL MARKETS

Thomas Murray offers public risk assessments on sub-custodians and CSDs, and is regularly called upon by governments, exchanges and other capital market infrastructure entities to help improve their capital market standards. With a complete global picture, Thomas Murray can benchmark groups against their peers and has developed tools to support financial market infrastructures in meeting CPMI-IOSCO minimum standards.

In its annual one day workshop in Toronto, Thomas Murray will explore a range of the strategic issues facing the industry and its participants. Thomas Murray’s Directors will share their views and opinions on what are the key risks facing institutional investors in the changing asset servicing industry both globally and locally.

Join Thomas Murray for our Trends in Custody and Post-Trade Risk Workshop. The event in Toronto, on Monday 20 June 2016, will be between 09:00 am and 05:00 pm.

Thomas Murray will present, by way of a workshop, a current assessment of global custody developments and the issues faced by investors. There are increasing regulatory demands placed upon asset managers and owners to ensure that their assets are held in such a way that there would be an orderly and timely recoverability in the event of an issue in the custody and market infrastructure chain.

On Wednesday 4 May, AFME will be hosting its ninth annual post-trade conference in London. Topics to be discussed on the day include T2S, the Capital Markets Union, MiFID II, due diligence questionnaires and new technology in the post-trade space.

On the back of a hugely successful post-trade roundtable for funds event in London in February, Thomas Murray are delighted to announce our next event, Post-Trade Roundtable on Regulation in 2016: What does this mean for the Buy-side?